KUUL

For the Davenport, Iowa radio station which previously used the KUUL callsign from 1989 to 1998, see WLLR-FM.
KUUL
City of license East Moline, Illinois
Broadcast area Greater Quad Cities
Branding 101.3 KISS FM
Slogan Your Hits!
Frequency 101.3 FM (MHz)
First air date February 23, 1976 (as WEMO)
Format Top 40 (CHR)
ERP 50,000 watts
HAAT 152 meters
Class B
Facility ID 43208
Transmitter coordinates 41°37′10.0″N 90°17′41.0″W / 41.619444°N 90.294722°W
Callsign meaning Different spelling of KOOL for former Classic Hits format
Former callsigns WEMO (1976-1978)
WZZC (1978-1982)
WLLR (1983-1998)
Owner iHeartMedia, Inc.
Sister stations KCQQ, KMXG, WFXN, WLLR-FM, WOC, KWQC-TV
Webcast Listen Live
Website 1013kissfm.com

KUUL (101.3 FM, "101-3 KISS FM") is a Top 40 (CHR) radio station serving the Quad Cities area. They are owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. with studios located in Davenport, Iowa. The station is known as "101-3 KISS FM" or simply "KISS FM". The station is branded after Los Angeles Top-40 station KIIS-FM.

History

Early history (1976-1998)

The station began life in February 1976 as WEMO ("EMO" standing for East Moline) and playing adult contemporary music. In 1978, the station adopted a country format, with the call letters WZZC. A change in station ownership came in late 1982, and in January 1983, the station — while retaining the country music format — changed its call letters to WLLR.

During this time, WLLR began a slow climb toward becoming the Quad Cities market's top-rated radio station, a goal achieved in the late 1980s.

KUUL 101.3 Oldies Era (1998-2012)

In March 1998, WLLR's country format swapped frequencies with 103.7 FM's oldies format. At the time of the switch, KUUL was formatting rock oldies from the 1950s through early 1970s, but the emphasis gradually shifted toward hits of the 1970s and at one time the 1980s, although the station always retained part of its 1960s library.

From 2001-2007, KUUL carried "The Bob & Tom Show" during its morning programming block after originally airing on the former WHTS-FM, but the show has since been switched to KCQQ. The move coincided with a new morning show teaming Steve Ketelaar and Mark Manuel.[1] Following the 2002 holiday season, the station began adding 1980s hits to its library, dropping nearly all of its pre-1964 music, thereby tweaking the format to an oldies/classic hits hybrid similar to KQQL. That music mix remained in place through 2009, when – after a series of layoffs – the station began automating most of its programming through iHeartRadio's oldies stream; the playlist was shortened to only 1960s and 1970s hits, with approximately two dozen 1980s titles remaining. The only live on-air talent remaining were morning show hosts Mark Manuel and Steve Ketalaar.

During the holiday season (roughly, Thanksgiving to Christmas Day) from 2002–2007, KUUL switched to an all-holiday music format.[2] The holiday format moved to KMXG since the 2008 holiday season.

Top-40 Era (2012-present)

On February 20, 2012, KUUL switched formats to CHR as "101-3 KISS FM. The first song played on 101-3 KISS FM was "Turn Me On" by David Guetta feat. Nicki Minaj. Programming includes Elvis Duran and the Morning Show, 101-3 is the only station in Iowa besides Kiss 1075-Des Moines to play the show. Hits 100.7-Bloomington, in Illinois but transmitting to Iowa as well, also plays the show. The last song played on KUUL 101.3 prior to the format switch was "Rock Your Baby," a 1974 No. 1 hit by George McRae. With the demise of the oldies format, several of KUUL's former programs were moved to sister station KMXG, including American Top 40: The 70s, Into the 70s with John Landecker and The 70s with Steve Goddard. In addition, the morning show, hosted by Manuel and Ketalaar, was moved to sister station WOC. Its transmitter is located in Port Byron, Illinois.

With the exception of Todd Alan, KUUL's programming are made up from Premium Choice lineup, including Jojo Wright, Billy the Kidd and Sisanie.

Current Station Lineup

Weekdays

Saturday

Sunday


References

  1. from Quad City Times (March 3, 2007)
  2. from Quad City Times (December 7, 2002)

External links